ATERAL DISARMING A POSSIBILITY See page 4 Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 46F :43 a t 4LOUDY, WARMER F1Vin UENn ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1957 FIVE CENTS ... _ R. Embassy Eisenhower/ Sent to Bed-with Ch Ailment 1ue *,j, 'U * *.' * * * * * lice Break Anti-American, British monstration by 300 Students, >()-Riot troops and police broke up a teen-age demon- ainst Britain and the United States yesterday as British ister Harold Macmillan held inconclusive talks here over rms. ng "Algeria is French" and "Macmillan to the gallows," young men, many in leather jackets, attempted to march .ted States Embassy near the Place de la Concorde. ithorities had been warned to expect possible riots by signs' n walls overnight by two rightist, parties declaring, "The -British and Americans have given arms to the Algerian rebels via dle E a t. Tunisia." -~L Heavy rings of police and troops IPhad been thrown about the British DL ut and United States embassies short- } IIly after Macmillan flew in from London to begin his talks with hieNd French officials. U 1 t IPolice Move Quickly, Almost as soon as the youths 1 NATIONS, N. Y.(A')-began converging, the police moved General Dag Hammar- in with their clubs. About 00 'of leave Friday for an- the demonstrators were bundled e mission to the Middle into police bans. The remainder, UN announced yester- were herder into the center of the. Place ,de la Concorde and police -isit the Jordanian capi- hurled stench bombs into their iman and confer with midst. I ngents in the -rea "in- Warned by the electric atmos- nenerts. thephere, Macmillan tried to smooth prm i Tri - the way for NATO unity by de- ups Prompt Trip claring upon arrival: "We are in flarepps along the Is- the same boat-don't let us or any- an anid Israeli - Syrian one else rock it." ompted Hammarskjold ' Small Relief to French. he visit, which will last But this was small relief to the a week. feelings of the French. They be- ials would not conuent lieve Macmillan and President s that Damascus and Dwight D. Eisenhower, who will ere also on Hammar- attend a NATO summit conference nerary. in Paris in mid-December, already esman said Hammar- had rocked the boat by delivering ned to confer ,in areas 900 small arms to the troops of [interests are directly Tunisian President Habib Bour- and that the detailed guiba. f stops would be in- The British and American view Ster. is that the step was necessary to ir Stops Certain lm forestall any Tunisian-Soviet arms asfCairo d Jerusale deal, and that Bourguiba promised the weapons would be used only onfer in Amman on the for Tunisian security.' ronJerdin Aman on tve .Macmillan returned to the Brit- Stas Jordan that he erieoe issthrough the sorons States marine officer ino i Embsasstruhisfthcrond an harged the officer of talks with Premier Felix Gail- S nhie h.dlin l To Airport Speech in Cleveland Cancelled by Illness WASHINGTON (P) -President Dwight D. Eisenhower was ordered to bed by his doctors yesterday be- cause of what the White House called a "chill." WITH KING: The development caused can- cellation of a nationwide televi- TIae hnth sion-radio address the President e s . u was scheduled to make in Cleve- land tonight. Chill at Airport The White House fii'st an- nounced - shortly after 6 p.m., 7T U EST-that President Eisenhower had suffered a chill, resulting from H g a i his appearance at National Air- port this morning to greet the WASHINGTON 03) -The chill King of Morocco, and had been that sent President Dwight D. ordered to bed. Eisenhower to bed threatened yes- At 8 pm., associate press see- terday to upset the King of Moroc- retary Anne Wheaton issued this co's plans for talking with him terse statement: about international problems in- "The White House announced cluding the future of American tonight that the President's sched- airbases. uled speech in Cleveland Tuesday King Mohammed V had ar- night had been postponed because ranged to being those high-level of his illness." discussions with President Eisen- Refused to Elaborate hower at the White House at 9 The statement was timed at 7:50 a.m. today. p.m., but it was 10 minutes after Two hours had been ,set aside that when Mrs. Wheaton handed for the meeting which was to in- typewritten copies to newsmen in elude Secretary of State John Fos- the White House lobby. ter Dulles and Moroccan Foreign The press secretary steadfastly Minister Ahmed Balafred. refused to elaborate on the state- Plans Not Given mnent.. "I cannot go beyond that," she TheWhite House after disclos- told reporters. ing the President had been ordered Earlie rhehad. said that Presi to bed by his doctors late yesterday dent Eisenhower was being attend said nothing about whether he ed at thenWhite House by two would be able to keep his date with physieians, Maj. Gen. Howard M. the King today. Snyder and Col. Walter R. Tkach. King Mohammed said last night Given 'Quieting Medicine he was "extremely sorry" to hear Snyder is the chief White House of the President's illness. doctor and Tkach is his assistant. A press spokegman who relayed Mrs. Wheaton said the fact two this to a reporter said the King doctors wereattending the Presi- had been informed afterreturning dent did not necessarily mean from a visit to a mosque. they both were with him at all Arranged Months Ag time . Today's meeting between the two Sh also told reporters they had leaders was the first of two which given President Eisenhower "some had been arranged months ago in quieting medication." keeping with Mohammed's desire Mrs. Wheaton said the Presi- to discuss problems with President dent's chill began to develop be- Eisenhower at the highest level. tween 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. He was A second meeting had been set in his White House office in the for Wednesday afternoon at 3:30 executive west wing at the time p.m. to take up such issues as and decided to go to his living American aid to Morocco and' Al- quart ers. gerian rebellion against France in When he reached there he sent North Africa. for Snyder who immediately oy- -_ dered the President to bed. First Illness Since June FranTests This was President Eisenhower's nee9 OSS first announced illness since he suffered a stomach upset lastNew M ssileS June. It was Jine a year earlier, 1956, that he was stricken with ileitis and underwent major sur- PARIS ) - The French De- gery. fense Ministry disclosed yesterday It was September 1955 the Pres- that France has successfully test- ident suffered a heart attack in ed two high altitude missiles deep Denver and was hospitalized for in the Algerian Sahara Desert:. seven weeks there. The missiles called Monica V and Veronica have been fired to heights up to 160 miles at speeds .. C i V ew of 3300 m.p.h., the ministry an- nouncement said. Veronica was described as the Exehan ge lan larger, w e i g hin g around 784 pounds. Monica V weighs around Student Government Council 339 pounds. I will consider the fate of its Free The French missiles apparently University of Berlin program at are designed' in several stages, 7:30 p.m. today in the Student similar to those tested 'by the Activities Building. United States, Russia and Britain. SGC helps to finance an ex- No details of the military ap- change with the Free University plications of the missiles were giv- of Berlin. One University student en and the announcement said visits Germany for a year and one only that the missiles "were con- German student comes to the Uni- structed for scientific exploration versity. of the upper atmosphere." hlay "ace Launch S}atelli Orbit Next We , Iny Sph WillWei~ Siox Pounq Early Dawn At Scheduled for At Patrick Air WASHINGTON (P) - attempt to launch Amer test satellite - a sphere in diameter, weighing si -- planied for the midd week, informed sources terda. These informants sai tempt will be made at Pa Force Base, Fla., next or soon thereafter. A d is planned. -Daiiy-David Arnold KLEINSTEUCK FIRST-"Fire Down Below" shows the typical chaos that reigns when 'a large dormitory has a fire drill. The skit, given by the Alice Lloyd house, placed first last night in the annual Assembly Fortnite in competition with 15 other independent groups. See story on page five. s ran dis border dis- Zmarskjold will arrive n on Sunday. He plans to UN headquarters1 in to by Three Trips, Last Year Hammarskjold visited the Mid- - East three times last year. He ert on peace missions to the 1estine area in:April and again .July, and obtained agreements at resulted in a lessening of rder tension for a time. The Israeli and -British-French tack on Egypt came in Novem- r, .and Hammarskjold made an- her trip afterward in connec- on with the setting up of the UN nergency Force and the repairs the Suez Caiia1. ;GC Groups( 'ositions open r'o Applicants Petitions are now open for Stu- nt Government Council stand- g committee chairmanships and sitions on its two related boards. The committees open for chair- an are Education and Social elfare, Student Activities, Na- mnal and International Affairs id Public Relations. The Council is also looking for f Administrative Wing Director, elections director and an office anaget. Cinema Guild Posts Open Positions are also open on the inema Guild and Human Rela- ms Boards. The petitions can be picked up Roth Callahan's office in the tudent Activities Building' daily. The. Education and Social Wel- re committee' is now working,on .e feasibility and value of a more 'ecise marking system. It has also ne work oil library hour exten - on and the honor system. Plans Special Projects The Student Activities Commit- e is responsible for -special SGC 'ojects and works with new clubs hich petition for recognition. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -The Supreme" Court ruled yesterday that repeat- ed refusals of a witness to answer questions falling, within the same general area of inquiry constitutes one, not several cases of contempt. The ruling was given in the} case of Oleta O'Connor Yates, Califor- nia Communist leader, who re- ceived 11 one-year concurrent sen- tences for criminal contempt of court-, SPOKANE - Every available sheriff's officer was flung into a search last night' for nearly 100 dynamite caps possibly in the hands of Spokane Valley school childien. The search was begun after yoing Jerry McConnell, 11 years old, and his nine-year-old brother, Timothy, were seriously injured late today when one or possibly two dynamite caps they were play- ing with exploded' in the living room of their Otis Orchards home. * * * JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, the South African diamond and gold king, died alone at his breakfast table yesterday. He was 77 years old., C IVil Rights Post Given To Attor ney WASHINGTON h(R -President Dwight D. /Eisenhower yesterday picked W. Wilson White of Phila- delphia to head the new civil rights division in the Justice De- partment-subject to approval by the Senate. ' White already is an assistant attorney general, in charge of le- gal counseling, and had been re- ported previously to be in line for the civil rights post. Stirred Southern Criticism However, there had been hints that President Eisenhower might seek to by-pass the Senate on any vote of confirmation and merely shift' White from one assistant attorney generalship to another. Those reports, which had stirred up Southern criticism, were dis- posed of by the White House an- nouncement that the Senate would be asked to pass on White. Wanted Senate Approval .Mrs. Anne Wheaton, associate presidential press secretary, said that both President Eisenhower and White felt the selection should be passed on by the Senate because of the importance of the job. As assistant attorney general heading the civil rights division, White would handle lawsuits al- leging interference with Negroes' voting and other rights. The job was created in the civil rights bill passed last session by Congress.y White is reported to have done much of the work backgrounding President Eisenhower's actions in the integration troubles at Little Rock, Ark. 'NEW YORK (P-Former counterspy Boris Morros says a 1953 Soviet Secret police plot to assassinate President Tito was canceled only 12 minutes before the hour appointing for killing the Yugoslav Communist leader. Morros, writing in the current issue of Look magazine, dates the time set for Tito's execution as March 1953. Stajin, who carried on a bitter five-year propaganda war with Tito over the Yugoslav leader's U.S. COUNTERSPY: Morros teveals Plot To- Kill Tito in 1953 , resistansce to Moscow domination, <1 died early that month. His secret police chief, Lavrenty Beria, is believed to have been removed from power shortly afterward when other members of the hier- archy frustrated his bid for total power. - Morros, a former Hollywood motion picture producer, was iden- tified 'by the United States Justice Department last January as a,,key figure in the apprehension of a Soviet spy ring in the United, States. He has said, he served the United States for 12 years as a counterspy member of an interna- tional Soviet ring. The Russian secret police began laying their plans in 1950, with an experinental abduction and assas- sination of three Yugoslav officials in Vienna. Morros was sent to Yugoslavia by the Russians later that year, posing as an American movie pro- ducer. His assignment was to "case" the country. It was not until March, 1953, however, that he learned a Poviet agent named Yefimov, with a staff of six assistants, had been assigned to liquidate Tito. An agent disguised as a Catho- lic priest was to do, the killing., Secret Plane Able To Fly- 4,700 MPH / The globe will be fired eastward into space and ad for a generally equatorial c To Have Four Batterie It will have four tiny solE teries, -half an inch thick, to its outside, and will hav or six antennas. It will tr signals continuously on 108 cycles, so that it can be di by radio. The solar batteries shou as long as the life of the s, itself. Unlike the full-scale futt ellite , this one will contf ,special telemetering instni and thus will tell' nothing conditions in outer space. Up 300 to 1200 Miles But if all goes well it join the Soviet Sputnik es at altitudes from 300 tC miles. The baby satellite launched by the Vanguard that will be used later to'r 21-inch ;regular satellites ir sky, in order to test those r Murray Ask U.S.To Sha Atomic Arm WASHINGTON (A) -- E. Murray yesterday -adN scrapping most of the mar secrecy provisions of the Energy Act and sharing weapons as well as knowhc America's allies. Murray, who was freque odds with the Eisenhower istration when he was a r of the Atomic Energy Comi thus ranged himself in of - or possibly ahead' of President in seeking char the Atomic Energy Act. He made his suggestioni capacity as a consultant Senate-House Atomic E i Committee, which distribu 3,500-word document. Murray recommended til special statute-created cate nuclear "restricted data"b ished and the President b the same authority to main modify secrecy in the field as he has in military;i generally. Poland Top WASHINGTON P)- A govern- ment research engineer said yes- terday the Air Force's secret re- search plane, the X15, will'explore flight conditions up to 200,000 feet altitude and at speeds up to 4,700 miles an hour. Hubert M. Drake also reported that in the more distant future "boost glide" planes now on the drawing boards may operate at speeds up to 18,000 miles an hour. Such planes are sent to great heights, where their motors cut off, and they glide back to earth without power. Drake, stationed at the Nation- al Advisory Committee for Aero- nautics for high speed flight sta- tion at Edwards, Calif., did not give details of either development. Spain Nears Relatio ns ift With Morocco' MADRID, Spain P) - Spain's relations with Morocco were near the breaking point yesterday be- cause of bloody clashes in Spain's West African colonies. EXPERTS SAY U.S. MUST PUSH PROGRAM: Scientists Warn Senate Against Missile Slow-Up WASHINGTON (A') - Two re-I nowned scientists told Senate investigators yesterday that an America, facing space age perils from Russia, must push missiles and retaliatory power with top speed. SEdward Teller and Vannei Bush both testified that the; mis- country might become a target of intercontinental ballistic, missiles carrying hydrogen bomb warheads made in Russia. Faces Great Dangers Teller, famed as the father of the hydrogen bomb, said America confronts dangers greater than those of World War II. He said tige and power and bringing Amer-, ica abreast of Russia *in missiles,k satellites and science. The two scientists offered sug- gestions and gave their ideas on) the size of the task. Teller said he believes Russia has "the technical foundations'" for getting to the moon. This, he' Teller saw it, is that this country is unwilling to gamble on scientific developments unless it can see some concrete accomplishments in the offing. He said Russia will gamble. Not Taking Risks "We are not," Teller said, "tak-, ing the kind of risks in the cold took the witness stand. The sub-' committee hearings are a direct offshoot of Russia's successful launching of two earth satellites. Teller said there are a great many thingsthat can be done now. He listed these five: 1) Look carefully into the stat- us of the Strategic Air Command Spain has sent reinforcements to the colonies from the Canary Islands, her former protectorate in northern Morocco and from Se-3 villa in southern Spain, reliableF informants said.3 Fifteen Heinkel bombers also } Of Pro gra The last in a series of t grams on the Soviet Ur Eastern Europe will be at 8 p.m. today in Aud. Hall. Sponsored by the Comi the Prograi in Russian {